Vic Bein
Posted: Thu May 12, 2022 3:51 pm
I’ve just recently joined the forum, but I remember years ago (perhaps even decades ago!) browsing on a similar forum which at some point just vanished into thin air. I’m assuming that this forum is its successor, as it seems to deal with very similar topics.
On the old forum I came across a story which I found very interesting. The author was (I think) an American who was at the time whiling in Verbier. He set off one day on a telemark rig to skin up to the Grand-Saint-Bernard Pass and noticed a strange fellow-tourist heading in the same direction. The tourist was dressed in a monk’s robe and was shuffling along on a what appeared to be a DIY telemark setup. He had hammered a couple of nails through the bases of the skis and had made some holes in the front of his boots to engage with the protruding nails. The author joined up with this character and fell into conversation with him. After a short while he was shocked to discover that his new-found travelling partner was none other than Vic Bein, a Polish-American who had authored a book titled “Mountain Skiing”, published in 1982. I started skiing in 1983 and this same book was an inspiration to me, as I’m sure it was to many others, dealing, as it did, with both Nordic and Alpine touring and early attempts to merge the two disciplines. The author of the article had the book himself and had even brought it with him to Verbier. I still have it as well, sitting on the shelf just above my head as I type.
Vic Bein had turned his back on skiing and had devoted his life to the monastic way. He was on his way up to the monastery (hospice) on the Grand-St-Bernard Pass to spend some time with the monks there.
Assuming this forum is indeed related to the older forum referred to, I wonder if any forum members also recall this story (titled, appropriately, “Telemonker”)? Although I bookmarked it, the link was broken when the website disappeared and I’d love to find the story again. Anyone who has read Vic Bein’s book could hardly fail to be impressed by the techniques described and amply illustrated with photo sequences. An internet search for Vic Bein will show the book (now out of print), but there is no information about the man himself or what happened to him.
Can anyone give any pointers as to where the “Telemonker” article can be retrieved, or provide any information on what Mr. Bein (or, more correctly, Brother Bein) is doing nowadays?
Jurassien
On the old forum I came across a story which I found very interesting. The author was (I think) an American who was at the time whiling in Verbier. He set off one day on a telemark rig to skin up to the Grand-Saint-Bernard Pass and noticed a strange fellow-tourist heading in the same direction. The tourist was dressed in a monk’s robe and was shuffling along on a what appeared to be a DIY telemark setup. He had hammered a couple of nails through the bases of the skis and had made some holes in the front of his boots to engage with the protruding nails. The author joined up with this character and fell into conversation with him. After a short while he was shocked to discover that his new-found travelling partner was none other than Vic Bein, a Polish-American who had authored a book titled “Mountain Skiing”, published in 1982. I started skiing in 1983 and this same book was an inspiration to me, as I’m sure it was to many others, dealing, as it did, with both Nordic and Alpine touring and early attempts to merge the two disciplines. The author of the article had the book himself and had even brought it with him to Verbier. I still have it as well, sitting on the shelf just above my head as I type.
Vic Bein had turned his back on skiing and had devoted his life to the monastic way. He was on his way up to the monastery (hospice) on the Grand-St-Bernard Pass to spend some time with the monks there.
Assuming this forum is indeed related to the older forum referred to, I wonder if any forum members also recall this story (titled, appropriately, “Telemonker”)? Although I bookmarked it, the link was broken when the website disappeared and I’d love to find the story again. Anyone who has read Vic Bein’s book could hardly fail to be impressed by the techniques described and amply illustrated with photo sequences. An internet search for Vic Bein will show the book (now out of print), but there is no information about the man himself or what happened to him.
Can anyone give any pointers as to where the “Telemonker” article can be retrieved, or provide any information on what Mr. Bein (or, more correctly, Brother Bein) is doing nowadays?
Jurassien